40X.
If you look at a thick opaque object through a compound microscope, you would likely see little to no details as the object is blocking the passage of light. Additionally, the object may appear dark or shadowed since light cannot pass through it to form an image on the microscope's lens.
The object would be more clear or more blurry.
To magnify something by 400x, you would need to use a microscope or other optical device that is capable of enlarging an object 400 times its original size. This means the object would appear 400 times larger when viewed through the lens of the microscope.
A drop of milk under a very powerful microscope would reveal individual fat globules, casein proteins, and other components suspended in a liquid. The fat globules in milk are typically around 1 to 10 microns in size, so they would be visible in detail under such a microscope.
Under a microscope, the letter "g" would appear magnified and more detailed, with its shape and structure visible at a much closer level. The edges and curves of the letter might show more intricacies and imperfections that are not typically seen with the naked eye.
*A microscope magnifies because if it enlarged an object, it would make the object under the microscope physically bigger. *Magnifying just makes it appear bigger than it actually is.
A microscope can make objects appear hundreds to thousands of times bigger than they actually are, depending on the type of microscope and its magnification level used. This allows for the observation of tiny structures and details that are not visible to the naked eye.
The letter E would appear as an upside-down and inverted image under a compound microscope due to the way the lenses magnify and flip the object. The actual appearance would depend on the magnification level and resolution of the microscope being used.
When you move the object under a microscope, the image of the object appears to move in the opposite direction. This is due to the way the lenses in the microscope magnify and invert the image that is being viewed. So, if you move the object to the left, the image will appear to move to the right, and vice versa.
If the object is too thick for light to pass through, the light would be blocked and unable to reach the objective lens. As a result, the object would not be visible or would appear very dark and blurry under the microscope. Adjusting the focus or trying a thinner sample would be necessary to obtain a clearer image.
You would need to move the slide to the right in order to bring the object from the left side to the center of the field of view under the microscope.
The light is necessary when you are using a microscope because if you don't have the light turned on, then the object or specimen you would like to examine won't be showing up. The light makes you have the capabiltiy to see what your object looks like under the microscope, and if your light isn't being used, then you will not see your object, probably only darkness!!! (Hope this helped)
the stage on a microscope is where you would place the object being microscoped. you would put the object lets just say a leaf, on the flat part with lenses above
Yes - but a specimen can be something that is not observed under a microscope as well. For example, if you ever went on a walk in the country, picked a wildflower that grew there, and brought it home, you would have a specimen of a native plant that grew in the area where you found it.
You would use a compound microscope with transmitted illumination or a digital microscope with top lighting. These microscopes can illuminate the object from above, allowing you to observe details even if the object is too thick to let light pass through it.
The lense
because it would not fit under the microscope